CoffeeCrew Blog

Eat, drink and love...
like there is no tomorrow.
Because, hey, you never know!.

1st ever Latte Art throw down for Haiti - in Victoria at DISCO · Monday January 25, 2010 by colin newell

Rob Kettner rocks the house at the 1st ever Latte Art throw down for Haiti!

I had the pleasure of watching all of Victoria’s coffee passion packed into one room at Discovery Coffee on Discovery Street…
and I got to judge a round. How about that.

Tonight in Victoria.

Everyone was there and the love was in the air.
There was enough zippy coffee groove to knock small planets out of their orbits. But that is not why we were there.

A good dozen or so of the Island’s best baristi duked it out for the Earthquake ravaged country of Haiti – and we raised almost $1000.

The winner was one of the lovely and charming gals from DISCO on Oak Bay Avenue – runner-ups included Geir Oglend of the Drumroaster in Mill Bay.

More photos here

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Coffee in Victoria B.C. and the lower Island EAT Magazine · Friday January 22, 2010 by colin newell

I will let the article do the talking… or the reading I guess.

Click here

Many thanks to Rebecca Baugniet of EAT Magazine for kick starting this.

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2009 a year in review - part one · Monday December 28, 2009 by colin newell

2009 in review - the great, the sad and the uglyOne of the more challenging aspects of wrapping up a year is getting a sense of what the heck it was all about; summing up the highs and lows and moving forward with a sense of closure and anticipation of growth and evolution.

2009 was difficult in light of some of the deeply personal challenges that arrived at our feet (many of which we are still unraveling) and utterly brilliant in the number of bright and shiny doors that opened.

Photo right – Given the opportunity to write for EAT Magazine on a monthly basis has opened doors… and menus!

And the thing that is most ironic or perhaps eloquent or even bittersweet is that you can experience tragedy and opportunity at the same time. In immensely lethal doses.

And guess what? It tastes like a macadamia-nut and maple infused slice of French toast. Really, it does.

Because while my dear wife and spent evening after evening sitting on the lanai of our Kona area condo, we tasted the saltiness of our tears combined with the bracing fruit of a California Merlot, followed by a Pinot Noir, followed by a Shiraz, – all with great home cooked food of course!

Some would say that the combination of tears, sadness and laughter is a sign of madness – in our case it was a part of healing and re-birth.

We spent almost the entire month of November 2009 in the tropical womb of Hawaii, surrounded by friends, given our space – to meditate and find peace as we neared the conclusion of a tumultuous year.

And what made it the most difficult was the loss of our Wing-Man – my Mom-in-law. She was like the proverbial co-pilot, who when faced with a insurmountable ethical, moral or technical question, would look at the dashboard of the cockpit, illuminated with a zillion possible answers, glance over the console, through the windscreen and down onto the unforgiving World below, furrow her brow and toss out the most obvious and logical answer possible.

Yup. That was what she was like. She always had the answer. Which left me with that sweet option of being along for the ride – maybe pulling my weight… maybe not.

And losing that creature-feature in your life is like losing the aircraft hydraulics or tail rudder… no so easy when you are in charge of the crew and passengers.

Now I am the captain. And it is a tough role trust me. Still getting a feel for the cap and the uniform. It’s still kind of sticky but it think I am up for it.

Anyway. 2009 was one of those years where it occurred to me that there were going to be way more opportunities than time to actually do everything justice.

These stories and some of their outcomes in Part two!

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Baby bottom bugaboos and other bewildering blather · Tuesday December 8, 2009 by colin newell

Tim Hortons pulling the wool over our eyes - drive through nonsenseWhile waiting in line for my favorite serving of breakfast (a weekend or so ago…) I noticed a young parent plunk down their diapered bambino on the cafe counter adjacent to the POS terminal. You know, where staff put food and beverages…
The young couple had just pushed their way into the cafe with a HUMVEE sized stroller that essentially trapped us mortal folk inside the cafe. In the event of fire or pestilence we would have died happy while grabbing for our favorite baked goodies while fire and smoke overtook our sorry souls.

But this does not bother me half as much as Tim Horton’s HQ who are desperately trying to hang on to their profit share by using some kind of Faith based science in defending their unbridled expansion of drive through extensions in the Province of Ontario.

I use the term Faith in that they must really take themselves seriously if they expect us to believe in the nonsense that they are pitching.

Facing a rising brew ha ha of municipal anti-drive-thru ordinances, Horton’s parent company TDL commissioned a study last year from RWDI consultants, based in Guelph, Ont… comparing total emissions given off by customers’ cars that use drive-thrus and those that use parking lots.

The stunning result: — that cars using drive-thrus produce lower emissions than those using parking lots.

The suggestion is… parked cars generate more pollution than the idling cars in the drive-through. Right.

Fact is, it is a high stakes game because Timmies makes almost 50% of its revenue from un-conscientious smoggers. Yes lots of folks simply cannot get out of their cars because of squalling babies and implacable pets – and there are other reasons.

Timmies supposition that Drive-Throughs work towards a general social good is cynical and deceptive. And we are not buying it.

And neither should you.

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